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Mathews unhappy for lack of test matches for SL

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Former skipper Angelo Mathews is unhappy with the amount of Test cricket Sri Lanka are scheduled to play in 2023.

Sri Lanka is only due to play five Test matches this year, with two Tests in New Zealand, one Test at home against Ireland – a side not involved in the World Test Championship – and two Tests in Pakistan.

By contrast, their white-ball schedule is full, with 11 ODIs, six T20Is, the Asia Cup and the Cricket World Cup locked in for the remainder of the year.

However, they can still qualify for the 2023 World Test Championship final at the Oval provided they defeat New Zealand 2-0 in their ongoing series and Australia avoid defeat to India in the final match of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

Mathews said: “[It’s] unfortunate that we are not playing too many Test matches this year – it’s as few as five. We are coming off a long layoff; the last Test was six months back.

“Everyone’s talking about Test cricket dying, but we’re not doing any good for Test cricket playing only five Tests a year. Hopefully, we’ll get more matches this year. Five feels like not enough.”

The World Test Championship table perfectly illustrates the unequal distribution of red-ball internationals. England, for example, has played 22 matches during the 2020-23 cycle while Sri Lanka has only played 10.

The majority of series which count towards the Championship is only two matches. However, the big three – Australia, England and India – frequently play four or five-match series against one another.

West Indies international Jason Holder recently expressed his grievance with the lack of Test cricket for nations outside the big three, commenting: “The way world cricket is going now, apart from the big three, every team is barely even playing Test cricket.”

ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට ටෙස්ට් තරග නොමැතිවීම ගැන මැතිව්ස් නොසතුටෙන්

2023 වසරේ ශ්‍රී ලංකාව ක්‍රීඩා කිරීමට නියමිත ටෙස්ට් ක්‍රිකට් ප්‍රමාණය පිළිබඳව හිටපු නායක ඇන්ජලෝ මැතිව්ස් නොසතුට පළ කර තිබේ.

ශ්‍රී ලංකාව මේ වසරේ ක්‍රීඩා කිරීමට නියමිතව ඇත්තේ ටෙස්ට් තරග 5ක් පමණක් වන අතර, නවසීලන්තයේදී ටෙස්ට් තරග දෙකක්, අයර්ලන්තයට එරෙහිව එක් ටෙස්ට් තරගයක් – ලෝක ටෙස්ට් ශූරතාවලියට සම්බන්ධ නොවන කණ්ඩායමක් – සහ පාකිස්තානයේ ටෙස්ට් තරග දෙකක් ඇත.

ඊට වෙනස්ව, ඔවුන්ගේ වයිට්බෝල් කාලසටහන පිරී ඇති අතර, එක්දින තරඟ 11 ක්, T20I තරඟ හයක්, ආසියානු කුසලානය සහ ක්‍රිකට් ලෝක කුසලානය වසරේ ඉතිරි කාලය සඳහා අගුලු දමා ඇත.

කෙසේ වෙතත්, ඔවුන්ට තවමත් 2023 ඕවල් ක්‍රීඩාංගණයේ පැවැත්වෙන ලෝක ටෙස්ට් ශූරතා අවසන් මහා තරගයට සුදුසුකම් ලැබිය හැක්කේ ඔවුන් දැනට පවතින තරගාවලියේදී නවසීලන්තය 2-0ක් ලෙස පරාජය කළහොත් සහ ඕස්ට්‍රේලියාව බෝඩර්-ගවස්කාර් කුසලානයේ අවසන් තරගයේදී ඉන්දියාවට පරාජයෙන් වැළකී සිටියහොත් පමණි.

මැතිව්ස් මෙසේ පැවසීය: “[එය] අවාසනාවකට අපි මේ වසරේ වැඩිපුර ටෙස්ට් තරඟ ක්‍රීඩා නොකිරීමයි – එය පහක් වැනි සුළු ප්‍රමාණයකි. අපි දිගු දොට්ට දැමීමකින් ඉවත් වෙමු; අවසන් ටෙස්ට් තරඟය මාස හයකට පෙරය.

“හැමෝම කතා කරන්නේ ටෙස්ට් ක්‍රිකට් මැරෙන එක ගැන, නමුත් අපි ටෙස්ට් ක්‍රිකට් වලට කිසිම ප්‍රයෝජනයක් කරන්නේ නැහැ වසරකට ටෙස්ට් තරග පහක් පමණක් ක්‍රීඩා කරනවා. බලාපොරොත්තු වෙනවා, අපිට මේ අවුරුද්දේ තවත් තරඟ ලැබේවි. පහක් මදි වගේ දැනෙනවා.”

ලෝක ටෙස්ට් ශූරතා වගුව රතු-පන්දු ජාත්‍යන්තර තරඟවල අසමාන ව්‍යාප්තිය මනාව විදහා දක්වයි. නිදසුනක් වශයෙන්, එංගලන්තය 2020-23 චක්‍රය තුළ තරඟ 22 ක් ක්‍රීඩා කර ඇති අතර ශ්‍රී ලංකාව ක්‍රීඩා කර ඇත්තේ 10 ක් පමණි.

ශූරතාවලිය සඳහා ගණන් ගන්නා බොහෝ තරඟාවලි තරඟ දෙකක් පමණි. කෙසේ වෙතත්, විශාල තිදෙනා – ඕස්ට්‍රේලියාව, එංගලන්තය සහ ඉන්දියාව – නිතර තරඟ හතරක් හෝ පහක් තරඟාවලියක් එකිනෙකාට එරෙහිව ක්‍රීඩා කරයි.

බටහිර ඉන්දීය කොදෙව් ජාත්‍යන්තර ජේසන් හෝල්ඩර් මෑතකදී විශාල ත්‍රිත්වයෙන් පිටත ජාතීන් සඳහා ටෙස්ට් ක්‍රිකට් නොමැතිකම සම්බන්ධයෙන් සිය දුක්ගැනවිල්ල ප්‍රකාශ කළේය: “ලෝක ක්‍රිකට් දැන් ගමන් කරන ආකාරය, විශාල තිදෙනා හැරුණු විට, සෑම කණ්ඩායමක්ම යන්තම් ටෙස්ට් ක්‍රිකට් ක්‍රීඩා කරන්නේ නැත.”

இலங்கைக்கு டெஸ்ட் போட்டிகள் இல்லாததால் மெத்யூஸ் மகிழ்ச்சியடையவில்லை

இலங்கை அணி 2023ல் விளையாடவுள்ள டெஸ்ட் கிரிக்கெட் போட்டி குறித்து முன்னாள் கேப்டன் ஏஞ்சலோ மேத்யூஸ் அதிருப்தி தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.

நியூசிலாந்தில் இரண்டு டெஸ்ட் போட்டிகள், அயர்லாந்திற்கு எதிராக உள்நாட்டில் ஒரு டெஸ்ட் – உலக டெஸ்ட் சாம்பியன்ஷிப்பில் பங்கேற்காத ஒரு அணி – மற்றும் பாகிஸ்தானில் இரண்டு டெஸ்ட் போட்டிகள் கொண்ட இலங்கை இந்த ஆண்டு ஐந்து டெஸ்ட் போட்டிகளில் மட்டுமே விளையாட உள்ளது.

இதற்கு நேர்மாறாக, அவர்களின் ஒயிட்-பால் அட்டவணை நிரம்பியுள்ளது, 11 ODIகள், ஆறு T20Iகள், ஆசியக் கோப்பை மற்றும் கிரிக்கெட் உலகக் கோப்பை ஆகியவை இந்த ஆண்டு முழுவதும் பூட்டப்பட்டுள்ளன.

இருப்பினும், 2023 ஆம் ஆண்டு ஓவலில் நடக்கும் உலக டெஸ்ட் சாம்பியன்ஷிப் இறுதிப் போட்டிக்கு அவர்கள் இன்னும் தகுதி பெற முடியும், அவர்கள் நியூசிலாந்தை 2-0 என்ற கணக்கில் தங்கள் தற்போதைய தொடரில் தோற்கடித்து, பார்டர்-கவாஸ்கர் டிராபியின் இறுதிப் போட்டியில் இந்தியாவிடம் தோல்வியைத் தவிர்க்கலாம்.

மேத்யூஸ் கூறினார்: “[இது] இந்த ஆண்டு நாங்கள் அதிக டெஸ்ட் போட்டிகளில் விளையாடாதது துரதிர்ஷ்டவசமானது – இது ஐந்து போட்டிகள் மட்டுமே. நாங்கள் நீண்ட ஆட்குறைப்பில் இருந்து வருகிறோம்; கடைசி டெஸ்ட் ஆறு மாதங்களுக்கு முன்பு நடந்தது.

“எல்லோரும் டெஸ்ட் கிரிக்கெட் அழிந்து வருவதைப் பற்றி பேசுகிறார்கள், ஆனால் நாங்கள் டெஸ்ட் கிரிக்கெட்டுக்கு ஒரு வருடத்திற்கு ஐந்து டெஸ்டுகள் மட்டுமே விளையாடுகிறோம். நாங்கள் இந்த ஆண்டு அதிக போட்டிகளைப் பெறுவோம் என்று நம்புகிறோம். ஐந்து போதாது என்று உணர்கிறோம்.”

உலக டெஸ்ட் சாம்பியன்ஷிப் அட்டவணை சிவப்பு-பந்து சர்வதேச போட்டிகளின் சமமற்ற விநியோகத்தை மிகச்சரியாக விளக்குகிறது. எடுத்துக்காட்டாக, 2020-23 சுழற்சியில் இங்கிலாந்து 22 போட்டிகளில் விளையாடியுள்ளது, இலங்கை 10 போட்டிகளில் மட்டுமே விளையாடியுள்ளது.

சாம்பியன்ஷிப் தொடரில் பெரும்பாலானவை இரண்டு போட்டிகள் மட்டுமே. இருப்பினும், பெரிய மூன்று – ஆஸ்திரேலியா, இங்கிலாந்து மற்றும் இந்தியா – அடிக்கடி ஒன்றுக்கொன்று எதிராக நான்கு அல்லது ஐந்து போட்டித் தொடர்களை விளையாடுகின்றன.

மேற்கிந்தியத் தீவுகளின் சர்வதேச வீரர் ஜேசன் ஹோல்டர், பெரிய மூன்று நாடுகளுக்கு வெளியே உள்ள நாடுகளுக்கு டெஸ்ட் கிரிக்கெட் இல்லாதது குறித்து தனது குறையை சமீபத்தில் வெளிப்படுத்தினார்: “உலக கிரிக்கெட் இப்போது நடந்துகொண்டிருக்கும் விதம், பெரிய மூன்று அணிகளைத் தவிர, ஒவ்வொரு அணியும் டெஸ்ட் கிரிக்கெட்டை கூட விளையாடுவதில்லை.”

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Sri Lankan Bodybuilder Suminda Chamara Idangoda Achieves International Recognition in Canada

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Sri Lankan bodybuilder Suminda Chamara Idangoda has earned notable success on the international bodybuilding stage, showcasing remarkable dedication and perseverance under challenging circumstances.

Competing at the Jim Morris Legacy Cup held in Canada on April 12, 2025, Idangoda secured third place in both the Masters category and the Light Heavyweight division. His preparation for this event involved a three-month training program under the guidance of his coach, Rizan Azoor, with whom he maintained remote training sessions while moving between Sri Lanka and Canada.

Just weeks later, on May 4, 2025, he competed at the Mindio Show, once again in the Light Heavyweight category. Despite having only 18 days to prepare, he went on to win two gold medals. His coach provided detailed and intensive training support throughout the short preparation period.

Idangoda’s path to success was not without obstacles. He faced financial difficulties and career uncertainty while preparing for the events. He even had to drive over 400 kilometers alone to attend the competitions and spent the night in his car due to a lack of accommodation funds. Despite these hardships, he remained focused and committed to his goal.

These victories have now qualified him to participate in NPC (National Physique Committee) bodybuilding competitions, a major milestone in his career.

Idangoda also expressed his appreciation to those who offered support during his time in Canada.

This achievement stands as a testament to his dedication to the sport and the growing presence of Sri Lankan athletes in international bodybuilding competitions.

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Football

Sri Lanka U19 Football Collapse Exposes Deep Flaws in FFSL’s Youth Development and Governance

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Sri Lanka’s humiliating 13-goal downfall in just two matches at the SAFF U19 Championship 2025 has laid bare the critical failures in preparation, technical development, and governance by the Football Federation of Sri Lanka (FFSL).

After suffering an 8-0 loss to India and a 5-0 thrashing at the hands of Nepal, Sri Lanka crashed out of the tournament without scoring a single goal — a result symptomatic of a poorly planned campaign lacking any strategic foresight.

Despite knowing the SAFF U19 tournament would kick off on May 9, FFSL conducted the final player trials only on March 27, 28, and 29 — giving just over a month for squad selection, tactical preparation, and conditioning. To make matters worse, the team departed for India on May 7, leaving no room for acclimatization or final preparations.

Rather than conducting a proper youth tournament to identify the best talent across the country, FFSL relied solely on trials — a flawed approach that fails to account for the natural ups and downs in player performance. One poor day at trials could cost a talented youngster his chance, while truly elite players may never even get scouted.

Adding further concern was the decision to include Sri Lankan-origin players directly into the starting XI without proper assessments or integration into the team structure. This move, seen by many as superficial, was akin to placing icing on a cake that was never baked.

Despite grand public claims, FFSL’s much-hyped “Y19 Tournament” in collaboration with Lyca Gnanam Foundation turned out to be nothing more than a media stunt. No such competition materialized on the ground, leaving local youth players without the competitive platform they were promised.

This is not only a technical failure but a complete collapse in administrative responsibility. The lack of grassroots planning, long-term youth development frameworks, and regional scouting shows FFSL’s hollow commitment to actual football development.

Even more alarming are the disciplinary concerns, with reports emerging that the U19 head coach physically assaulted five players at the team hotel — if it is ture, a severe breach of professional conduct that demands immediate investigation and accountability.

The blame cannot rest solely on the President of FFSL. The 2023 election saw three influential football administrative figures unite to secure victory. Yet, in the face of this collapse, only the President faces criticism, while the others remain conveniently silent.

It is clear: playing international matches alone won’t develop football. What Sri Lanka needs is a structured, grassroots-driven technical program — not public relations campaigns or shortcuts.

Unless FFSL reforms its approach to youth development, embraces merit-based talent identification, and ensures accountability at all levels, Sri Lankan football will continue to languish in mediocrity, both regionally and globally.

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Football

Sri Lanka U19 Football Team Crashes Out of SAFF Championship with Embarrassing Defeats

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Sri Lanka’s U19 football team suffered a humiliating exit from the SAFF U19 Championship 2025 after being routed 5-0 by Nepal in their second group stage match, just days after a crushing 8-0 defeat against India. With 13 goals conceded in two matches and none scored, the team’s dismal campaign has raised serious concerns over the Football Federation of Sri Lanka’s (FFSL) preparation and technical planning.

Goals Link: https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1ZXQmc7qJL

The back-to-back heavy losses reflect more than just poor on-field performance — they expose a deeper structural failure in Sri Lanka’s football development system. The decision to hurriedly assemble the squad and include overseas-based Sri Lankan-origin players may have been well-intentioned, but it turned out to be a superficial fix — akin to placing icing on an unbaked cake.

Despite individual talent and moments of athleticism, the team lacked cohesion, tactical discipline, and fitness — a direct result of inadequate preparation and the absence of a proper long-term youth development strategy.

This tournament has made it abundantly clear that international match exposure alone cannot bridge the technical and developmental gaps in Sri Lankan football. Grassroots investment, school-level competitions, proper coaching structures, and continuous player development pathways are urgently needed if Sri Lanka is to be competitive at regional or international levels.

It is time the FFSL technical department, its President, and Executive Committee move beyond media optics and press conferences and instead focus on real football development. Structural reforms, professional planning, and technical consistency must replace ad-hoc preparations and cosmetic fixes.

Sri Lanka’s early exit should serve as a wake-up call: the future of Sri Lankan football depends not on imported talent but on nurturing homegrown players through sustained and systematic development.

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